〔FULL〕 Concert Leaks Twitter Digital Vault HD Media Instant

〔FULL〕 Concert Leaks Twitter Digital Vault HD Media Instant

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I have two tickets for (to) a concert However, your sentence don't actually treat about witch situation occurred first (although by context we are. I have two tickets of a concert

Concertleaks on twitter, who is very reliable, posted this and then

The first is a correct sentence, but the second is wrong They had called before it has happened Why can't we use the phrase tickets of?

As above, it is never correct to say on the concert

There's also a special idiom, in concert, used to indicate that a person is performing Come see paul mccartney in concert this tuesday at center stage I saw the beatles in concert 40 years ago Here, in concert is used as if it were the opposite of in a recording.

The use of giving is grammatical in the sentence presented Per oxford learner's dictionay, you also use the verb give with a noun to describe a particular action, giving the same meaning as the related verb He gave her a kiss = he kissed her However, upcoming refers to an event, a situation that is going to happen in the near future like a concert, festival, etc

lilayyy on Twitter: "concert leaks so real."

Forthcoming usually refers to something/an object that will soon be available, reachable, published

If you are going to a particular concert, or you're en route to a particular concert, you should use the definite article (the) We're going to a playground tomorrow. How can the answer in the following test question be "it" Akagi was unable to buy tickets for the concert because it/they was sold out.

4 you liked the concert how Sounds very unnatural to a typical american How did you like the concert Is the correct and typical way to ask the question.

Concertleaks on twitter, who is very reliable, posted this and then

I prefer staying home to going to the concert

I'd prefer to stay home (rather) than (to) go to the concert Would you please elaborate which one you use Or, when or where would distinguish between I didn't go to (the) party i didn't went to (the) party

After the auxiliary verb do the main verb must be in the plain form This is the form you see in the dictionary It does not have any tense It is not past or present

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*he doesn't goes to the gym

For describes wishes about the past we usually use past perfect tense I wish i had brought my wallet And, when we need to talk about two past situations mutually related and clarify their chronology, we should use present perfect + past perfect